Fortnite In Game Settings: [Basically the most agreed upon settings; also have seen other pros getting 300-400 FPS with these]http://prntscr.com/k9i2pg

In a game like Fortnite, I believe it's the same scenario wherein you should turn G-Sync off to gain the highest FPS (for competitive play) now I do this but I find myself dropping FPS in gunfights up close, while looking around too much, or in specific places in the map. I watch other streamers and their FPS is a lot higher than mine when my PC is better. I could use some help to optimize my in game FPS through NVIDIA Control panel. I have the same in game settings as others, just my NVIDIA Control Panel settings (I don't have the other NVIDIA software installed, but I do have EVGA Precision settings my fans to max)

I generally get around 160-240 FPS while running the game and moving my line of sight (just looking around etc) but I see other pros getting 300-400 FPS. My idle FPS on load screens can reach 400, but that's about it. Anyone have any experience here?

Have been a long time lurker here, just signed up after getting my monitor from the guides / reviews here so thanks!

Your CPU is holding you back. Fortnite is CPU bound with long draw distances, high player count and dynamic building fights. You need high frequency and high IPC on a few cores rather than many slower cores. In other words, an Intel quad+ core.

Also, high speed ram can help in CPU bound games, but usually only in instances where performance hits a wall at some CPU frequency. I doubt you'd see improvements with your Ryzen chip, but something to think about if you switch to Intel.

YukonTrooper wrote:Your CPU is holding you back. Fortnite is CPU bound with long draw distances, high player count and dynamic building fights. You need high frequency and high IPC on a few cores rather than many slower cores. In other words, an Intel quad+ core.

Also, high speed ram can help in CPU bound games, but usually only in instances where performance hits a wall at some CPU frequency. I doubt you'd see improvements with your Ryzen chip, but something to think about if you switch to Intel.

Isn't the 1920X a 12 Core CPU? Older games wouldn't have issues at all with this kind of specification.

haanuman wrote:Isn't the 1920X a 12 Core CPU? Older games wouldn't have issues at all with this kind of specification.

AFAIK, in Fortnite more cores are not useful. Higher speed per core is what matters most. In other words, a 12-core with low clocks will perform worse compared to a 6-core or even 4-core with higher clocks.

I don't know much about Ryzen, but if you can disable half the cores on it and then clock the remaining ones much higher should give you a nice perf boost. I don't know if the interconnect layout plays a role here. It's probably best to read up on Ryzen overclocking strategies.

At the very least you should have gsync on with vsync off. That turns gsync on unless your fps exceeds your refresh rate.

IMO you should turn gsync on and cap at 236 fps. Any extra frames you get beyond your maximum refresh rate are essentially junk frames. They will have tears which is conflicting visual information and will make predicting movement less accurate, hampering your aim and movement.

It is a matter of personal preference (VSYNC OFF versus GSYNC). But wildly fluctuating framerate games like Fortnite can actually work better with GSYNC enabled.

I actually watched (on Twitch) some eSports players such as Fatal1ty play Fortnite that suddenly capped out at 240fps. I am not 100% sure if that was VSYNC ON, a framerate cap, or GSYNC/FreeSync -- but most 240Hz monitors are variable refresh rate capable and it is possible they were playing VRR.

If you enable GSYNC, then I do recommend capping slightly lower than max Hz, 236fps, to avoid the lag-surge effect of slamming against 240fps and falling below 240fps. (Basically it switches to VSYNC ON the moment your framerate hits 240fps).